Propane Autogas

National Park Adds Propane Buses, Trucks

As a national park, it is important to protect the environment and the local resources for visitors to enjoy.

For Mammoth Cave National Park, its sustainability initiatives cover everything from reusing waste materials to installing recycled materials in the visitor center to incorporating alternative fuel vehicles into its fleet.

Since 2002, this Kentucky-based national park has used alternative fuels in its vehicle fleet, including E10 bi-fuel (ethanol and gasoline), biodiesel and propane.

“We feel a strong responsibility toward stewardship of what’s here and protection of the resources,” says Vickie Carson, Mammoth Cave’s public information officer. “Because air and water quality are of great concern, fuels like propane help us to show our visitors that there’s another fuel that can be used.”

To help incorporate alternative fuels into its infrastructure, Mammoth Cave has collaborated on alternative fuel and advanced transportation technology projects with the Kentucky Clean Fuels Coalition (KCFC), part of the Department of Energy’s Clean Cities coalition program, since the late ‘90s.

In 2011, Mammoth Cave received a $505,000 grant from the DOE’s Clean Cities program to replace its aging vehicles with new propane-fueled vehicles.

With this grant, the national park replaced four old propane buses (three 1990 models and one 1977 model) with four new autogas Bluebird school buses, as well as two bi-fuel pickups with two propane Roush CleanTech Ford F-250 pickups, according to Carson.

“KCFC was approached in 2011 by the U.S. Department of Energy with a request for Mammoth Cave National Park to serve as the first national park to participate in a direct Green Parks initiative, which carried with it funding for vehicles,” says Howell.

The Green Parks Plan also educates the public about the benefits of alternative and renewable fuels. “It’s a good demonstration project,” says Carson. “The 200,000 people who ride the [propane] buses can experience riding in an alternative fuel vehicle.”

In addition to using propane-powered vehicles, Mammoth Cave also uses propane in other areas of its operation. The Propane Education & Research Council (PERC) recently donated propane-powered equipment, including three John Deere mowers, two Generac portable generators and a CleanFuel USA propane dispenser.

A cave tour at Mammoth Cave National Park.

Maintaining Vehicles

From small sedans to passenger vans to a dump truck, a majority of Mammoth Cave’s fleet runs on bi-fuel (ethanol and gasoline) and biodiesel, according to Bobby Sanders, Mammoth Cave’s heavy equipment mechanic.

The eight propane buses transport visitors daily on the cave tours. According to Sanders, the Mammoth Cave Hotel — operated by Forever Resorts — operates the propane buses and takes them to an outside vendor for regular maintenance.

Averaging about 500 miles per week, the two propane-powered F-250 pickups are used by the park’s law enforcement division for patrol and emergency response. Sanders takes care of routine maintenance for the trucks on-site at Mammoth Cave’s garage.

For filling up the vehicles, Mammoth Cave has an on-site refueling area with E10, biodiesel and propane. When it comes to fuel consumption, the savings for propane would be in the cost per gallon; propane is $1.89 per gallon, says Sanders.

“There is no performance difference with propane,” says Sanders. “It is an efficient fuel. Propane is so much cleaner than other fuels; even the engine parts stay cleaner.”

Propane autogas vehicles provide a lot of value when it is time to replace or retire the asset, whether fleet owners plan to sell privately, at a public auction, or trade-in the vehicle. Here are a few things to consider when making the decision.

Roush CleanTech revealed that its 0.02 grams per brake horsepower-hour engine can operate on renewable propane. The company says it's the first available engine for renewable propane that brings emission levels to "near-zero" as defined by California Air Resources Board.